The Bossticks - How To Eliminate Toxic Ingredients & Products From Your Life Ft. Ken Cook, President Of The Environmental Working Group AKA EWG
Episode Date: May 29, 2023#574: Today we're sitting down with Ken Cook, president and co-founder of the Environmental Working Group. Ken is known as one of the environmental community's most prominent and influential critics o...f industrial agriculture, U.S. food and farm policy and the nation's broken approach to protecting families and children from toxic substances. Today Ken joins us for a really insightful conversation about the ingredients inside our cosmetic products and food, and how making the switch to non-toxic products doesn't have to be intimidating. He gets into the laws and lack thereof surrounding ingredient testing in the United States and gives our audience tangible tips for phasing out the toxic products that we use on a daily basis. He also dives into foods: what foods should be bought organic VS what foods are safe to eat non-organic, how to grocery shop for long term health, and what foods you should absolutely avoid. To connect with Ken Cook & The Environmental Working Group click HERE To visit Skin Deep click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE Subscribe to our YouTube channel HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential This episode is brought to you by Sakara Sakara delivers science-backed, plant-rich nutrition programs and wellness essentials right to your door. Their ready-to-eat meals are nutritionally designed to deliver results—from weight management and eased bloat to boosted energy and clearer skin. Go to Sakara.com/skinny or enter code SKINNY at checkout to receive 20% off your first order. This episode is brought to you by Betterhelp BetterHelp is online therapy that offers video, phone, and even live chat-only therapy sessions. So you don't have to see anyone on camera if you don't want to. It's much more affordable than in-person therapy & you can be matched with a therapist in under 48 hours. Our listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com/skinny This episode is brought to you by Wella Wella Professionals just released its most luxurious hair care line; Ultimate Repair. You can purchase The Ultimate Repair Miracle Hair Rescue at Ulta stores, or go to wella.com to learn more. This episode is brought to you by AG1 AG1 is way more than greens. It's all of your key multi-vitamins, minerals, pre-and probiotics, and more, working together as one. Go to athleticgreens.com/SKINNY to get a free 1 year supply of vitamin D and 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a dear media production.
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She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur. A very smart
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you alone for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
Aha.
I do put a lot of trust in the government, but I always try and verify it, certainly in the
environmental area.
We have developed our own standards at EWG because the government just hasn't moved.
One of the great benefits of the environmental revolution that began in the 60s and 70s and 80s
was all this information that was generated that was never there before.
Information on everything from air pollution, tap water contaminants to endangered species to wilderness areas.
All of this was collected.
It's a huge victory for the environmental community that we got those laws put on the books
and that information was collected, even if it was collected.
wasn't always used.
Hello, it is Monday, and we are coming at you with an insane episode.
Today, we are sitting down with Ken Cook.
He is the president and co-founder of the Environmental Working Group, also known as the
EWG.
You've probably seen this website everywhere.
It's this incredible database.
And basically, it researches everything that's in your beauty products, your personal
care products, your food, your water, your tap water, your skin.
It goes through everything and sort of like gives it a score.
So I was even surprised to like go on there and search my kids water wipes that I use for changing diapers.
You can really search anything and you can find out the real deal about what is in your food and your products.
I have made so many switches to non-toxic products and I've used the EWG.
It's famous because they really specialize in research.
So I reached out to them and borderline to harass them.
And I was like, can I please interview Ken? Luckily, Michelle Pfeiffer, who was on this podcast, gave us an intro and we got him on. So thanks to Michelle, Ken is on the podcast. In this episode, we are going to talk about all the things. How to be aware of what you're consuming, what products you should be looking out for, why you need to do your own research, taking accountability for your health, the lack of laws surrounding ingredients, buying organic versus non-organic, playing the long game with your
health, toxic products, cosmetic products, and how to easily find non-toxic products. This episode
was so eye-opening for me. Ken was kind enough to do a huge clean skincare giveaway. He is giving
away so many incredible products. I am going to list them all at the end of this episode, but
basically to win all of these clean skin care products, all you have to do is follow at the
environmental working group on Instagram and comment your favorite takeaway on
my latest post at Lauren Bostic. On that note, let's welcome the iconic Ken Cook, president and co-founder
of the EWG, to the show. This is the skinny confidential, him and her. I could not be more
excited to do this episode. I think this is going to wake a lot of people, including myself up.
First, I want to lay the land. How did this even start this idea for EWG? So this is our 30th year.
I know I don't look a day over 20, would you say?
Yeah, you look good.
I have a girlfriend to hook you up with.
Happily married.
But, no, we started this back in, you know, 30 years ago in the early 90s as a think tank, a typical environmental think tank.
I grew up in the generation where I wanted to be like Ralph Nader.
I wanted to develop science and law and facts and make the case for.
protecting consumers, protecting the environment, protecting public health. And the way you did that
was you went to, you develop your information, you went to Congress, Congress passed a law.
The agency implemented regulations and the agency, you know, got the industry to comply and we all
benefited. The air got cleaner, products got cleaned up and so forth. We still do a lot of that.
But along the way, because of some really smart people who came on to our
team, we started putting information out that directly reached consumers, especially, obviously
after the Internet came along and people could go directly there.
This changed everything for us because now we were suddenly not having to wait, and this is
a subject we should touch on a little bit, wait for the government to get its act together
and do something in response to a problem.
The weight period, as we've all noticed, has gotten longer and longer like forever.
We could go directly to consumers through the Internet, interact with them, and they started
changing their behavior.
We showed them what foods had the most pesticides.
And we heard from food companies, this is changing our marketplace.
We started illustrating thousands of ingredients in thousands of personal care products.
And we identified the ingredients that we thought deserved concern,
market started shifting away from those ingredients and those products, the same with cleaning products, the same, on and on.
So what we discovered was a change in the way environmentalism worked.
And EWG today is known to most people as a great source of advice they can trust on toxic chemicals in their everyday life.
It could be something in your tap water.
It could be something in the furnishings you bring into your...
or how you clean your home.
It could be personal care products, skin care, cosmetics, what have you.
And of course, whatever you put in your grocery cart.
We have gone through all of those giant categories,
looked at tens of thousands of products,
pulled out the ingredients, evaluated the ingredients,
and come back to people with our best guess.
In some cases, it's a guess,
because information can be pretty sparse.
but our best assessment of the health and safety of the ingredients and the products that they're in.
I have a weird question.
I keep hearing about baby toys.
Yeah.
There's all these things in baby toys.
Well, over the years, again, the regulatory landscape.
So let's just say if you're at the environmental working group, which we are right now, right?
Environment to us is everyday life.
It's not wilderness only.
It's not smokestacks off in the distance.
It's not what comes out of a tailpipe.
The environment is what you metabolize in everyday life.
You know, the tea you're drinking now, the food you eat, the personal care products, and so forth.
And that includes all the products in your home.
So we knew from years ago that the government was fairly lax when it came to the chemicals in children's toys and other products.
There were thalates in children's toys, plasticizers that shouldn't have been in there.
Lead levels that weren't accurately assessed or tested.
And kids have this hand-mouth thing they do, right?
Especially little ones.
And the exposure was enormous.
The same with dust in homes.
Kids are crawling around on the floor and on the carpet, right?
Well, you know, you can't say to an 18-month-old, hey, now be careful.
Don't, you know, you've been crawling around for an hour.
Don't put your finger in your mouth because it's already in their mouth.
It's maybe even in mom or dad's mouth, too.
So all of these behaviors combined with the product offerings that have come out in many cases
from unregulated industries or very lightly regulated industries puts us on a collision course.
where there's lots of environmental exposures.
We haven't thoroughly analyzed.
They happen legally.
All these products are, in many cases, they're perfectly legal and the ingredients in them.
No rules, really, about what you can put in, with a few exceptions.
And as a consequence, you get these discoveries that, oh, my gosh, there's jewelry with lots of lead in it or children's toys with lots of lead in it.
Maybe the lead doesn't leave the jewelry and get into onto your skin.
maybe it doesn't leave the toy, but why do we have it in there to begin with is the question?
Why?
Yes, right.
Because it's cheap, because it's habit, because it's the way industry's always done things,
because there's no watchdog in the government looking at it.
And that's why groups like EWG, we try and play that role.
Is there a rise in these components in these products with the rise of lobbying?
Is that correlated at all?
Well, there's a defensive response by regulated industries or just industries generally for sure.
They spend a lot more money than the environmental community does, public health community does collectively.
So there's always resistance.
You can't think of a major environmental or consumer regulation where industry hasn't pushed back on us, right?
And so what I would say, though, is since we're no longer entirely dependent on the government,
government to protect us. We can go and to trusted sources online. And there's sources that are more
trustworthy than others. And we have plenty of shots taken at our credibility by industry and even
sometimes by independent scientists. So that's that's out there. We recognize that. But the information
that's now available is so much better and so much more actionable that people can take
smart steps, they don't have to move to a yurt in a mountain meadow to, you know, to have a clean and healthy life.
They can make steps in their everyday lives to eliminate tens of thousands of exposure events, as we call them every year.
Pesticides in food, sketchy additives in food, chemicals that ought not be in personal care products like these PFS chemicals.
You've probably heard about the Teflon and Scotch Garters.
our family of chemicals that are in all of us now.
They're in wildlife all over the world.
Well, some people thought it was a good idea to put it in personal care products.
We acted and in California they're going to be banned now,
but you've been exposed to them if you used any of those products,
thousands of those products, for decades.
And no one protected you.
I am about to move to a yurt.
What did you say?
I'm my, like, I'm borderline yurdy.
I think that the problem.
one of the biggest problems, especially in a country where you feel, you know, we, in a lot of
ways we live in a very artificial environment. That is, we have the illusion that we're safer
all the time than we really are. I don't think, like, I mean, you could see, even these last two years,
I think people were shocked. Many people were so shocked because they realized, wait, I didn't realize
I was this vulnerable. I didn't realize I was this at risk. And it was, a lot of people couldn't process
that. They just think, hey, and you see these, they walk around with their head down in their phone.
They're just buying anything off the shelf.
I think everything's safe.
And they assume that because it's on a shelf or because it's in a store or because that it must be safe, that the government or the people that put it out there have their health interests at heart, right?
There's so many things that get through to your point, this process or this regulatory system.
If you have no idea what they're even doing, they just assume it's there, it must be safe, right?
And I think that's the big, the reason I wanted to have you or we wanted to have you on here is I wanted to kind of share with people that you really have to kind of take your health into your own hands and understand.
that you're always at risk.
And it doesn't mean you have to be scared all the time,
but you have to be paying attention to what you're doing,
what you're consuming, what you're wearing,
all of these things.
Ken, do you think that there is something nostalgic
for the older generation to have to let go of their windex,
to have to let go of their tied laundry detergent,
to have to let go of these smells that they've almost gotten used to?
There's a little bit of pushback I noticed from the older generation.
Do you get that?
Yeah, for sure.
And it's not just, you know, it's not just older.
It can be anyone who's just accustomed to, you know, those kinds of products and thinking
that that is, as you say, you know, it's on a shelf.
Surely that someone in government has taken a look at this and made sure it's okay.
But we hear, you know, all the time that something the government has said is safe,
sometimes for decades, suddenly they're banning.
Roundup.
Roundup is, I mean, we're not ready to ban it yet, but it's been said to be safe.
We don't think it is.
Asbestos, a great example.
These PFAS chemicals, right?
So the Environmental Protection Agency has known for decades that these chemicals that were used in ScotchGuard and Teflon and other such applications in tens of thousands of consumer products, multi-billion dollar industries.
They started to hear no later than the late 1990s.
and industry knew decades before that this stuff was toxic in many ways.
It could cause cancer.
It could interfere with hormone activity, all kinds of adverse effects, just from this family of chemicals.
For decades, that was hidden from EPA.
But even when EPA knew it was a problem, it took decades to take serious action.
First, they banned two of the major ones.
We were involved in pushing for that in the early 2000s.
But then nothing happened for like 20 years.
And just recently, the agency has said,
we need to restrict the amount of PFAS in drinking water to three parts per trillion.
Three parts per trillion.
Such a tiny amount.
Why?
Because that's the level they think you could consume without harm.
We think it should even be lower.
But decades later.
So we've all been drinking this.
And when I say we've all,
EWG published a peer-reviewed study
where we estimated that some 200 million Americans
have this stuff at above one part per trillion
in their drinking water.
So just as that one example,
here you have this agency
that's supposed to be looking after us.
First, they're not told the full truth
in a timely fashion by industry,
as they should have been required to do.
Then the lobbying begins, the pushback,
don't even propose a standard for decades.
Finally, they propose one,
and now industry is pushing back and saying it's too strong.
If you go forward with that standard,
it'll cost too much to clean up.
It'll raise liability questions for polluters
who are continuing to use these materials
that ends up in drinking water and so forth and so on.
So I think the main distinction people need to understand
is the distinction between what's legal
and what's safe.
I would love to go through a couple of products
that people are using
that you maybe would advise
to really look into.
And quickly, between legal and safe,
all you have to look at is the tobacco
and alcohol industry, right?
Totally.
And that's,
and you also just have to look at it
to know how much
the government puts your health.
There is enough information out there now
to clearly point out that,
and listen,
I consume alcohol
and many people do,
but there's a number,
enough information out there to know that like it is not good for you. There's no health benefits.
It's not good for your brain. You know, maybe you feel like they used to, you know, they had this
study for a while where it was like resveratrol may be good in wine, but they found out that the
alcohol industry is the one that did all these studies, right? Their lobby. So listen, I'm not saying
you can have alcohol, but to your point, you have to know the difference between legal and safe.
It doesn't mean just because it's there, it's good for you. Yeah. In many cases, things are
there and they're terrible for you. Yeah. I always give the example that people can immediately relate to of
speed limits, right? So for a time, we had the national speed limit lowered to save energy during
the Carter administration. A lot of your listeners may not remember the Carter administration,
but lowered it to 55 miles per hour nationally to save energy, right? Because you use less energy
when you go slower. And we were in a crunch, right? We were out of oil. Prices were sky high,
lines around the block. So they imposed this 55 mile per hour speed limit.
And thousands and thousands of deaths and accidents, injuries were avoided immediately.
Right.
Then pressure came back to say, hey, this is too slow.
Western states, rural areas, whatever.
Let's lift that 55 mile per hour limit on highways.
And as soon as we did that, we had thousands of excess deaths every year.
Legal, but not safe.
The same with drinking water contaminants, the same with pesticides.
We have examples of pesticides.
Chloraphyrophos is a good example of bug killer.
It was used for decades.
And only recently both California at EPA have moved to ban it.
But we've had a robust scientific literature that showed for decades that this is a nervous system toxicant that we should simply get out of the food supply.
But industry pushed back very hard.
Farmers pushed back.
They wanted that tool, which is how they refer to it, to be able to control bugs.
Industry was making money selling the pesticide.
So we kept eating it and all the way up until the moment when EPA said it's unsafe,
we're going to ban it.
They said it was safe.
So you have this, I think, consumer collective memory now that this,
happens. This is, I think, what you're talking about. People are beginning to realize,
hmm, you mean, the stuff that's been in my water for, since I've been alive and I'm 55 years old
or whatever, this stuff, which EPA for years said was perfectly okay, suddenly they're
getting it out of water because it's far from perfectly okay? I mean, it's no secret that
during COVID, I was very hesitant to just take everything from the government.
government at face value and I'm not been shy about saying that because to your point, I kept looking
back at instances where they got it wrong and then later changed their opinion. There was, I can't
remember that you might know this. There was a vaccine for pregnant women that they gave a while back in,
I think in the, they tried to give it to me to. 50 or 60s. And then they had to later go and say,
if you were a baby that was born and had a mother with this vaccine. Oh yeah. They do still try
to vaccinate pregnant. I can't remember what it was. But there could be complications. They had to
like go and retract and look like this. There's a lot of stuff that,
we've gotten wrong. And if you think about it from a modern technology and science perspective,
like a hundred years ago, it was a very, very different time. We've moved very, very fast in a
short period of time, but it's a blink of an eye in terms of the time in this world. And so I'm
just like, I'm always hesitant to just take anything at face value. I'm like, oh, because somebody
in a position of authority is saying that they have to be correct, because I've seen them retract
too many times. No, I think it's healthy to have that skepticism. People make fun of those who do
their own research. I'm not sure that's the right approach to take. I think we should encourage
people to get better and better at research, but I don't think we should ever say discounted.
And to your point, if you look across the categories of products that are tested for safety,
arguably the most rigorously tested are drugs, right? Because first you do laboratory studies,
can include animal trials, then you do human trials if you want to bring a drug to market. You're
looking for side effects and efficacy.
You want to see if taking it causes problems, health problems, and you want to see if taking
it solves the problem you're taking it for, right?
Almost every year, there are examples of drugs that have gone through that whole process
that have to be withdrawn because they're injuring or killing some people.
And so those are, you know, realities.
These are realities.
And so what do you do?
Well, I do put a lot of trust in the government, but I always try and verify it, certainly in the environmental area.
We try and we second guess all the time.
We have developed our own standards at EWG that we think, because the government just hasn't moved.
One of the great benefits of the environmental revolution that began in the 60s and 70s and 80s,
Then it kind of slowed down, which we could talk about.
But one of the great benefits was all this information that was generated that was never there before.
Information on everything from air pollution to tap water contaminants to endangered species to wilderness areas.
All of this was collected.
It's a huge victory for the environmental community that we got those laws put on the books and that information was collected,
even if it wasn't always used.
Yeah.
Well, and also I want to make the distinction, there is a middle ground here where, to your
point, if you're wearing a tin hat living in a yurt in the middle of nowhere, that is also
not the answer.
You can't be so scared of your environment where you, where you're running around
paranoid about everything that is in a modern environment.
Sounds like me at the house.
Yeah, but, you know, like, you know, do I, there's, I think people take this to an extreme.
There's like, you know, there's, yeah, I want to double verify and question assumptions
and take some time and skip a bead and collect as much information as I can.
But I also don't want to go off the.
deep and it'd be like the government's out to get me and I got to move to the middle of nowhere.
But you better sure as hell.
That's right.
Bet that I am going to test or go on your website and put in what what lotion I'm putting on my
brand new baby.
Totally.
That is going to disrupt his endocrine system.
Michael's like, what are you talking about?
I look at the oil.
I want to know what I'm bathing him in every day.
I want to know what toothpaste my daughter is using.
I mean, I'm sorry.
Like I feel like this is something though that you have to take extreme accountability for
yourself and your own health. And if you're unwilling to do that and you're just going to blindly
trust all these people, I mean, there's sounds like to me there's going to be consequences.
Well, the way we got introduced is through Michelle Pfeiffer, who came on the show, such a lovely
person. Hi, Michelle. And like, it was a fascinating episode because she was just talking about
all the different perfumes and colognes that we put on our body without, you know, on all these
different endocrine disruptors that we're unaware of, but people think, hey, it's in a department store
and it's got a, you know, a fancy brand label on it and it must be good for us. And it's
What could go wrong.
What could go wrong.
But then as we got through that episode and listened and listened to our mission behind Henry Rose, like, it clicked and made so much.
That's actually all we wear now.
Because we realize, like, oh, she's right.
We're putting all this stuff on our body to smell in a kind of artificial way.
But with stuff that we don't know what's in this stuff.
And there's a lot of stuff that gets through here that probably shouldn't be on our skin and in our body.
No, that's right.
And, you know, one of the many amazing attributes of Michelle's brand is that she's part of the E.
VG verified program, which is a pain in the ass to go through.
She would be the first to say that.
I think she did say that.
She did say that, yeah.
She discloses all the fragrance ingredients.
If you get a product that says the word fragrance on it, it can be fine fragrance.
It's all fragrance.
It can be a soap or a skincare product, whatever, and it says fragrance on there.
That can hide dozens of chemicals that they don't have to disclose because they manage to get
federal law to block disclosure of fragrance. They want to keep that little industry, you know,
nice and traditional and secret. That's how it works sort of, you know, an very old-fashioned way
where fragrance manufacturers sometimes won't even disclose the ingredients in their fragrance
to a company that buys it to put in their product. So it's very, very deep secrecy that's rooted in
this sense that, you know, fragrance houses are creative.
places, and they are, that produce these unique blends of chemicals that provide the sense
that the fragrance houses are known for. But in all of that is the possibility that there will
be chemicals used that are not healthy, not safe. I just got back from Mexico. I had my birthday
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I feel like we also kind of know a lot of this stuff deep down.
I'll give you like a really stupid, strange example of as you were talking.
I obviously have tattoos and who knows, like, you know, younger, younger me.
But when you get tattoos, like we would always go and get fragrance-free soaps or lotion.
You just knew, like you wouldn't get something that's like, hey, I need the lemon,
because you would know you don't want it in that freshly kind of punctured skin.
And this is just stuff people know.
like to and so there's a reason that like I think a lot of this stuff's deep rooted and you can tell like this is artificial and maybe shouldn't be in our system and we wouldn't put it on our baby or wouldn't put it on freshly tattooed skater but then we go and we kind of nullify all that in our everyday life and say okay I will still use and we use our redkin hair paste that I can't get him off that's probably rated negative 800 some things Lauren I know but I could do without that but you know what I'm saying like we just we know some of this stuff deep down and we know it's not natural but we do it anyway that's right
And you don't want to, the point you made earlier, one of the things that we pride ourselves on at EWG is we try not to be the environmentalists some of your listeners may have in mind that's wagging their finger at you all the time.
That's not us.
What we're really trying to do is we're trying to say, look, our scientists have taken a close look at whatever it might be.
It might be something in the personal care aisle.
It might be something that you put in your card at the shopping center.
It might be something you wear.
We try and take a close look at the best available science, and sometimes there's very little
science available, and then we always try and give you an option.
Here's what you can do if you want something on your skin to soften it or make you feel
smooth or whatever experience you're trying to go for.
Here are some alternatives that don't have these same sketchy chemicals.
Giving people, first of all, not dictating to people, not telling them give up deodorant or
give up, you know, whatever your personal, your red can.
Here's an alternative.
I'm not going to take sides here.
Here's an alternative.
Try it.
And you don't have to like throw everything out and try everything new.
We also want to make people realize you've spent money on something.
Just start experimenting with another product that substitutes for that, that might be fine.
A perfect example, how we first started is our list of fruits and vegetables that, based
on government testing we know are pretty high in pesticides.
What's number one?
We call those the dirty dozen.
Usually it's strawberries or apples, one of the two.
And we publish a report every year updated by the latest USDA data.
I love to hear it's apples.
I hate when people chew apples.
It's the worst sound.
Oh, you have a, well, you may have that.
I can't remember what that's called.
Sensory issue, but the apples.
Whenever she's irritating me, I grab a big apple.
Just grab a big apple.
Just start going to flat.
Yeah, there you go.
All right.
But when we were developing this list, we also looked at the fruits and vegetables that because of the way pesticides are sprayed on them, when they're sprayed, what types of pesticides, they end up having very few residues in those fruits and vegetables when they reach consumers.
So that's the Clean 15, which is my point.
of course if you can find and afford organic, which my friend Phil Landrigan
still says is kind of like private school for food for many people.
It's great if you can find it and afford it, but not everyone can.
So we said let's make sure people have fruits and vegetables, which we need to eat a lot of.
Let's give them that list that's not organic but doesn't have pesticides.
The Clean 15.
Can you name some off that list?
Bananas are one that I always think of.
because I love bananas.
And conventional bananas, if you peel back the peel, as we do, unless you're eating the peel,
the pesticide levels are quite low.
And so we have that list updated every year for people.
You can get it directly into your phone when you go to the grocery store.
You don't have to give it a thought.
And we're not saying never eat, except in front of you, never eat an apple.
Never eat an apple.
Never eat.
What we're saying is just think about the option.
about the possibility of buying
organic apples or organic
strawberries. The market for those
has exploded. The organic
food industry is when we
first started doing this work,
organic, you couldn't tell
if organic food had been
harvested or if it had escaped.
It was that, you know, it looked that
bad. It was sort of looked like
it was raised in a,
you know, like in a camp or something somewhere.
But now it's a
$60, $70 billion industry.
industry. Produce is available in most parts of the country. Organic offerings are there. Potatoes,
frequently, carrots, broccoli, in-season grapes, and so forth. Things have begun to change,
and that's not because of the government. That's because consumers using their power have started
to drive the market. Same thing's happening in personal care. Michelle's company is a great example.
Same thing's happening in cleaning products. We don't have to wait for a government. And we're
And we shouldn't wait for the government to sort this out.
This is why this information is so important is the consumer base drives the markets, right?
Yeah.
And companies are listening.
And there are a lot of great people out there who, I mean, I said at the top, I wanted to be
Ralph Nader.
There are a lot of people in these companies who've never heard of Ralph Nader, but they want
to produce clean, safe stuff.
Did he run against Clinton?
He ran against a lot of people.
He ran against Gore.
He ran against Gore.
That was in 2000, and that was the big.
That's when some of us fell off.
the bandwagon. I want to give the audience
some things that they can do
immediately that would blow their mind. What are
some little tiny things that they can
He ran his Green Party, right? I'm listening to remember, green party.
I just got to remember. Yeah, he ran a
Gore v. Bush.
Finish the thing one. I just had to get, I had to remember. Go ahead.
It was not pretty.
I'm going to punch that Redkin paste
right on his face.
I had to close the native loop for some reason.
I just closed the loop. Okay.
What are, what are some things that would
blow Michael in my mind?
audience's mind that they could change right away that is like lurking in the shadows in their
house? Well, here's what I always advise people. First of all, you don't have to do it all at
once. So you straight and easy, simple, straightforward. We strongly recommend that because this is
the long game, right? We're talking about, for the most part, chronic illnesses, right?
Illnesses that develop over time. Sometimes they're very complex illnesses like cancer can be.
most cancers are pretty complex diseases.
It can take a long time.
We don't fully understand what triggers them.
We don't fully understand what unleashes the rapid growth that leads to metastasis.
All of those uncertainties tell you that you should be thoughtful before you feel like you have to make a sudden change.
So here's where we tell people to start.
Pick one category.
Pick personal care, for example.
The shampoos, the makeup, skin care, whatever you use, right?
Lauren's sweating now.
Yeah, this makes me sweat.
Go to our skin-deep database.
It's eWG.org or just type in skin-deep and eW-G.
Look, a thousand people an hour go to this website.
Whoa.
And which we didn't see coming.
Again, we thought we were a policy shop,
and if we put this great database out there,
it would help us prove that we needed regulation.
It does show that, but we didn't realize
that consumers would start going and shopping.
So when you go to,
skin deep at our site, enter in some of the products that you use and love and just see how
they rate.
And then we talk about each ingredient in those products, whatever information we can find out
about them.
You'll just get a sense, and I think it's worked out for a lot of people this way.
You'll get a sense that this is not a thoroughly regulated industry.
These ingredients aren't going, any of these ingredients aren't going to kill me immediately.
Again, it's long term.
What can I do to start shifting away from products that I've maybe relied on that don't get a very good rating in Skin Deep if you're concerned about it and move toward either eliminating that from your daily care?
And people use lots of products every day they don't necessarily need, right?
Maybe eliminate that or go to something that rates better.
And we show those right on Skin Deep, too.
You can do the same with food.
Our food scores database, tens of thousands of foods, we score.
all of the ingredients, and then we give a comprehensive score for the individual foods.
We recommend going one at a time and just give yourself some wins.
Give yourself some exposure reduction, you know, participate in a way with this information
that allows you to take a little control over what you're exposed to.
This brings me to a question that one of our incredible team members added here,
and I'm just going to read it for beta because it's relevant to where you're talking about right now.
It says the FDA has banned the use of 30 ingredients,
in cosmetics slash personal care products in the USA, but the EU has banned more than 1,600 ingredients
in their products. Can you get into why this is allowed to happen here in the United States
and why the FDA is allowing over 1,570 known toxins into our products compared to the EU?
Well, this is an example of an industry that is not rigorously regulated, and you would think
going to the cosmetics counter or going into a department store or CVS wherever you shop,
the soaps and the creams and all the rest,
that there are pretty rigorous rules about what can go in there.
No.
There's no pre-market testing required of any ingredient on the part of the government
before you formulate a personal care product.
Now, we just passed some legislation that gives important,
but still kind of rudimentary authority to the FDA to, for example,
recall something that has shown in consumer complaints to be causing, you know, a health problem,
like serious rashes or something like that. FDA didn't even have the authority to do that on the
books until the end of last year. So the long and the short of it is, here's how we regulate
cosmetics in this country. No pre-market safety testing. Finally, the ability of the FDA to recall when
there's a dramatic health problem that pops up from consumer complaints.
And the basic regulatory review is conducted by a group called cosmetic ingredient review
that is funded by, selected by, and located in the trade association for the personal care products industry.
So you could, and now we have had a good relationship with that trade association.
I just want to be clear.
And they have sided with us on a number of important issues that I think a lot of their members have recognized they need to do.
Like we need to get these PFAS chemicals.
There's no reason to put something like that in a personal care product.
So we had the support of that industry to ban it in California.
Likewise, we came together and supported it.
It wasn't enough for us, but we want much more rigorous regulation.
but they were on the same side to get basic regulation upgraded last year federally.
But we have a gap here.
This is not a regulated industry.
Same with cleaning products.
You can put almost anything in a cleaning product.
Food additives.
This is one that blows my mind.
Most of the food additives that you see that are allowed now,
some of the colorants and the flavorings.
Natural flavors.
Even if they're called natural.
in many cases those are on the market because the industry has asserted without FDA doing a careful review.
It's almost like don't ask for permission.
Listen, this is going to be very vulgar language, but I'm just going to say, even when you were kids, there was this joke if you drank Mountain Dew with Red 40 and it, your dick was going to shrink.
That was a joke?
That was like boys.
So did you and Taylor drink it?
No, I stayed away, Hans Thorne.
You know, you can tell I stayed away.
But kids like even, I mean, I mean, I mean.
remember being a little kid seven, eight, nine years old. I mean, like, don't drink Mountain Dew. There's
red 40 and they're like, what the hell is red 40? This is something that is abundant in many of our
products. And I, I, excuse it in his orange chicken from Panda Express. But why does that
why does that need to be in our food supply and what is it and how does it affect us? And to your
point, like this, you know, it's just there's, there was a huge, they say, I don't know, I'm not a doctor,
that there is, can be a relation to red 40 and ADD. Was it red 40 or red five? All these reds.
And now that there was a, uh, there was a, uh, there was a, uh, there was a, uh,
huge surge of ADD when that came out.
Yeah.
No, I mean, we're California Assembly just passed a bill that would, would ban that again
in California.
And here's this, this tells you something about the state of our policymaking process.
We could not get that done in Washington, D.C.
But in California, you have, you know, a different makeup of our legislature.
They're much more progressive in terms of concern about the environment and human health.
they're really leading the nation.
We have a governor right now who's also inclined that way, and his wife is super inclined
that way.
They're just very thoughtful about it.
We couldn't get it done in Washington, but we can get it done here.
And when you get it done in, what, the seventh or eighth largest economy in the world,
then companies manufacture across the board to safer standards.
So in that sense, we are seeing progress made.
But we just have to take action on our own in our daily lives.
It's easy to do.
You can't solve all the problems.
Some pollutants are out there and only government, only society can act.
And it damn well should.
We ought to expect our government to protect us.
But in other cases, you can't and shouldn't wait for the government to protect you.
You should just make changes in your daily routines, your purchasing patterns, your behaviors.
and you can eliminate a lot of these exposures, probably save money in the process,
and certainly avoid some of the worst, sketchiest exposures that you could face just in everyday life.
This is where I go back and forth because part of me is I'm, you know, we're part of a capitalist society.
I'm, you know, capitalistic and all the things.
But at the same time, I think that it's really important that people take personal accountability and do their own research.
We live in a strange period of time where we've evolved so fast.
there's such an abundance of products or such an abundance of offerings.
There's so many options where we just didn't have that 100 years ago, right?
We didn't have this abundant food source and all this storage and all these cosmetics and all these things.
And so people were really thoughtful back then on what they did, what they ate, how they got their foods, where it was sourced.
We don't do that anymore.
So there's a part of me that's like, listen, we live in this kind of society.
Business is going to do business.
But we've also gotten complacent as a people where it's like, if it's out there, it all must be good.
And there's a lack of research and personal accountability that takes place.
And we believe, again, that we're safer than we really are.
And it's a lot of the time because you're not participating actively in your own health or your own environment.
Can I ask you a couple rapid fire questions about this?
Go for it.
What laundry detergent do you use?
We use one of the EWG verified approved laundry detergents.
I don't want to say exactly which one, but we use the detergents that rate well in the EWG.
system. And the reason I don't want to mention is because there's a whole, there are quite a few of
them that rate well. Okay. And I don't want to, I don't want to tilt the scales away from a
company that's doing a great job that someone who goes to our website can make their selection.
So what I always shop according to the EWG recommendation. That's kind of my question. So instead
of shouting out a personal brand, you can go on there and you can see the top like 10 laundry
detergent. Or you can eliminate stuff that, like there's stuff probably on there. They're like,
this is no chance. No dryer sheets.
call out brands?
Are you hesitant to do that?
We tend to call them out online and sometimes in other ways when obviously there's a problem.
For example, we called out Cheerios a few years ago.
Cheerios.
Honey nut or regular?
Both of them actually, you know, from a nutritional standpoint, the regular ones are much better
than the ones that are loaded with sugar.
Cheerios, we found through laboratory studies we commissioned, have a wheat,
had a weed killer on them called Roundup, called glyphosate.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
My dad eats honeynut cherios.
Daddy, you better get rid of those.
Yeah, he eats them.
Your dad's a grown man eating honeynut cherries.
Yeah, he loves cereal.
Brow, what's going on to do you, man?
Late night, he loves a bowl of cereal.
Bro, what are you doing that?
And also, he better be using almond milk.
Of course he do.
Captain Crutch.
That on the, look that up right now.
Just munching on some Roundup.
Yeah.
And here's why here's why he's eating a weed killer is because,
oat growers primarily in Canada
at the end of the growing season
they spray this roundup on their oats
to kill the crop uniformly
so that they can harvest it
in a much more organized
predictable fashion right and it doesn't get wet
from late season rain and all all kinds of
so as a consequence boom
Taylor I just pulled a captain crunch up on the EWG and it's not good
it's not looking good at all no no it's a 10 too much sugar
Taylor literally has roundup in between each
tooth. Go ahead. Yeah. Well, so that's the, this is the thing, these regulatory gaps that, you know,
we try and understand, try and probe, try and apply our research. We have PhD toxicologists and
chemists who are constantly looking at the science. They're looking at regulatory decisions made
in other countries where we often will say, hey, you know, like the food data that we're talking
about banning in California, they're banned in Europe. So we're saying, really seriously, you mean to
tell me that a multinational food company formulates products in Europe that don't have these
sketchy things, but they don't formulate them that way here. Why? So some of that basic research,
and we're not the only organization that does it. We take a lot of pride in the fact that we do it
and do it well, and a lot of consumers come to our site. We probably, you know, I'm going to say
ballpark 25 million visits a year. That is changing things. So,
So here's what we know.
We know that the environmental movement, when it was getting it started in the 60s and 70s and 80s, we were passing environmental laws like left and right.
The Clean Air Act, the strongest environmental law really on the books was first passed, I think, in 63, then it was updated in 70 and 73.
Right, it kept getting updated because new science was coming along telling us, you know, here's what we know about LA's air.
We've got to do something, right?
But the pushback that began as a result of that success, which is the other dynamic here, is what we're dealing with, right?
So industry resisting regulation, maybe losing some battles, redoubles its efforts, more lobbyists, more campaign contributions, makes it harder and harder to pass a new law that updates, say, the Clean Water Act or the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Let me put it this way.
We couldn't pass the Wilderness Act today.
We couldn't pass the Endangered Species Act.
We probably couldn't pass the current Clean Air Act if we took it to this Congress.
That's how strongly industry has learned it needs to resist this regulation.
And so that means, so what do we do?
Well, with clean air, you know, that's a societal obligation.
You can't clean up LA air.
You can clean up your home air, and that's important.
That's your main source of air pollution exposure.
we can't clean up the skies.
We need the government to do that.
For many other categories of your daily life, though, you don't have to wait for the
government to update its regulation and push through the opposition from industry and
others who want to make money.
You can do it yourself.
And that's one of the main appeals of EWG, I think, is that we give people this information.
Also, when we don't know, we tell you, if we have a question mark about the data availability
on an ingredient in cosmetics.
We describe that.
We say data poor, data non-existent.
When the data is non-existent, should you be more hesitant?
I guess you don't.
You know, it's just non-existent.
And, you know, the scientists at our shop who are making those judgments, you know,
they don't want to condemn something because the data aren't there.
They also don't want to ignore the fact that the data aren't there and it should be.
But, you know, people aren't required in the personal care product industry to develop a rigorous data set.
If you're not required to do pre-market testing for safety, then you're not conducting the studies.
In some ways, it's good.
We shouldn't be doing animal studies that kill animals to see if an ingredient causes cancer and it happens to be in your makeup.
But we can do lots of other studies if we required it that would eliminate some of the uncertainty.
around these chemicals, but we don't do that yet. So we try and we give it our best educated
judgment and let you know what our scientists think. The skinny confidential him and her podcast
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This podcast has a lot of people who are listening who love beauty products and skin products.
You called out Cheerios.
You called out Captain Crunch.
Are there any beauty products that we should just steer clear from?
I wouldn't say there are any categories necessarily you should steer clear from.
Like Old Spice?
Old Spice.
Well, look it up on in Skin Deep.
It probably won't be good news.
What did I used to wear as a teenager?
My son's into fragrance now, so we're having conversations about it.
English leather?
Okay.
Wasn't that a thing?
Yeah, I was an English leather guy.
Okay.
Probably see that.
You look like an English leather guy.
Oh, yeah.
Secret deodorant.
Secret deodorant?
Look it up.
I mean, I think, you know, the uncents.
one might be marginally better.
I don't know.
I'm just guessing.
If it has fragrance in it, we ding it pretty hard in our skin deep program because that,
then we know people are, you know, that term is hiding ingredients that we can't evaluate because
we don't know what they are.
You know what?
Old Spice has a pretty decent score.
Is it okay?
Two.
Oh, that's pretty good.
Oh, that's not bad, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just don't.
The fragrance ones have three.
So that's, I mean, it's not great, but it's.
Wait, so 10 is the worst.
Ten is the worst in our system for personal care products, and the ones are the best.
Okay.
The green ones.
Green, yellow, red.
Okay.
And then above all of those in terms of quality is the EWG verified.
And that's the program that Michelle and Henry Rose are in.
And what that does, we decided at one point, what if we actually knew in great detail what was in these products?
We evaluate for Skin Deep just on what's on the label.
We add some other data too, but it's basically the listing on the label.
They're required to list ingredients by law.
It's one of the few things they're required to do in the personal care industry.
And so we, you know, we decided to dig in and see what all of those ingredients were.
And once we started doing that, we realized that there were an awful lot of products out there that were okay, as best we could tell, right?
If fragrance was listed, you know, that's not okay.
We don't think fragrance should be a shield for, in some cases, dozens and dozens of chemicals,
some of which we know from our, we've tested cosmetic products and we know that there are ingredients in some of the fragrances that you shouldn't have on your skin.
A lot of people are talking now about how all these women are wearing leggings.
and a lot of women wear it without underwear
and all these chemicals are sweeping through the leggings.
Is this something that we should be concerned about
or is this a little far-fetched?
What's your vibe on that?
That I don't know much about.
The whole question of what our scientists would call
migration, chemical migration from certain materials into your body
is another one where we would really love to have more data.
You're not required before you bring leggings on the market to do pre-market testing about migration from the fabric into your skin.
There's no requirement.
So we don't know.
You could do some lab testing and find that out.
Similarly with food packaging.
You know, we have some indication that some of the materials in food packaging, and that's also a Wild West, that it migrates into your food and that's how it gets into your body.
For personal care products, you apply it to your skin.
Oftentimes, the products have chemicals that are known in the industry as skin penetrators or penetration enhancers because you want it to go into your skin.
Well, if it is enhanced penetration and some of those ingredients are sketchy, they end up in your body.
And we've done biomonitoring studies, tested people's blood and urine, and found cosmetic chemicals in their bodies.
In your opinion, after seeing all of this, what are these sketchiest things?
Like, if you were to tell your son the five top sketchy, what is it?
I would definitely stay away from highly processed foods because of the many adverse
indications there are about nutrition and also the additives that are frequently in them.
So a lot of stuff with long shelf lives?
Yeah, just eat simpler, right?
Eat lower on the food chain, eat fresher.
Okay.
Right?
I would definitely say look at your personal care regime and eliminate stuff that you might be doing for strictly cosmetic or, you know, additional reasons that aren't essential.
These very elaborate skincare routines that require many, many products, I would really give that some close thought.
I don't want to speak for anyone who might be listening about what they prefer to do.
I would simply say to them, and I know it sounds like a soft cell, but really for it to work,
it feels like it has to be a suggestion and not a finger wagging.
I would say, look at those products on our Skin Deep database and ask yourself if you really need
that kind of routine.
Got it.
Stay away from black, dark hair dyes.
Right?
I just dyed my hair brown.
It looks fabulous.
Thank you.
I just want the record to show.
Don't get on me about my hair, you know, looking back my hair.
A red can paste.
I just looked it up on EWG.
What is it?
It's like an 11.
Is it actually?
I don't know.
I'm just kidding.
I don't want to say that.
I haven't looked it up.
If you could leave our audience with some advice, with everything you've learned, what
would that be?
That if you're thoughtful about this, not panicked, not paralyzed, if you're thoughtful
about this whole question of what you're exposed to in daily life and start forming some
new habits, you can make a huge difference on your own that won't require a dramatic change
in your lifestyle, won't require dramatic increase in spending. It's very attainable.
And there's an environmental health economy out there that's growing to help you do that.
There's plenty of sketchy claims. We'd have to go through them one by one. But there are
also plenty of good products and companies out there that are trying to do the right thing.
Now, I'm not one for the neoliberal market solve all the problems. I still think we need to
hold our government accountable. They're paid to protect us. They should be damn well doing it.
But I will say that there's tremendous potential that you should feel hopeful. There's never been
a better time to be the kind of environmentalist I'm talking about, which I am, which is an
environmentalist in daily life, right? Yes, I go to wilderness areas.
is when I can. And yes, I see smokestacks when I drive through L.A. and other places. But in the daily
life I live and with my family, my son and my wife, we just try and be careful in what we buy
and bring into the home and use. We have lots of tips on our website for how to do that. Don't get overwhelmed.
Start with something that's straightforward and easy and feels right. Give yourself a win and then give
yourself the next win and the next win and the next one, just like everything.
else. I would love to see a house tour by Ken Cook. I would love to go through Ken Cook's home and see a
house tour at some point. Yeah. I bet it's really cool. We have done, we have done some tours with people
in their homes and gone through, gone through their medicine cabinet. A colleague of mine years back
went, looked under the sink, looked up all the stuff on our website. And you could pretty quickly
tell how easy it is to eliminate some exposures that you don't, when you think about it, don't
really need. You can clean your countertop with lots of things that aren't toxic. You can wash your
laundry. You can, you know, fill your refrigerator. I've never thought you on this long. She's nodding her
head over there. No, I'm just nodding my head because when we first got together, there was an
undertone of windex. Well, I think there's a lot of people that either grew up with these products or
they put them off a shelf or they like, you know, you mentioned dryer sheets. I don't think,
like a lot of people wouldn't even think. I used to use dryer sheets. I don't, you know,
fortunately, I don't do my own laundry anymore. I've reached that level of my life now where I don't
even think about it, right?
We don't use dryer sheets.
Yeah.
Molly Suds.
Yeah.
Molly Suds.
You're going to be mad about the launch of comment.
I'm going to look it up on the EWG.
You're not saying anything.
If only a group of seven-year-old boys would go to Congress and lobby and say,
listen, you're going to have a small sex organ if you don't remove these ingredients.
I feel like we'd make some problems.
I'm just kidding.
We could cut the rest of it.
Well, you know, we got to find something these guys care about.
And that could be it.
We don't want to be a country of, you know.
what i'm saying here no well we we did we did focus groups one time and uh we really thought
we were making headway with a group of men we divide men from women of course because the men
mansplained through all the focus groups but we but but there was a wonderful moment in the
focus group where we really thought we had presented some information that was going to
flip the switch and bring them over to the side of environmental health we talked about these chemicals
that were linked to reduced sperm counts
and reduced sperm activity.
And the room got quiet.
And finally one guy raised his hand.
We're on the other side of the one-way glass.
We're thinking, we hit the jackpot.
We finally found out how to reach guys.
Raises his hand.
And he says, you know, when we first signed up for this,
you said there'd be sandwiches.
Oh, Jesus.
All they're thinking about is sandwiches.
It's not funny.
I'm just saying, I'm just saying
that's my tribe.
Yeah.
Listen, I thought you were going to say that he said,
oh, can I use this when I have sex with a bunch of girls?
Because my firm counts.
I'm not going to get someone pregnant.
This honestly may sound sexist,
but I think, and I'm saying this nicely,
us men are just, we are just dumb animals.
We need the women to lead the charge.
Because when my wife tells me we're changing the household products or I'm changing the skin products or we're changing.
We moved from L.A. to Austin.
I said every single thing in your life is changing.
I said.
And Ken, you know it as a married man?
I said, okay, well, that's what we're doing, I guess.
I changed every single thing about the way we live.
Yeah.
And I appreciate it now.
I'm like that.
I notice a difference.
I like it.
I like the ingredients.
I like this.
You know what's crazy too?
We're just too dumb as men.
We just can't do it.
We walked into a friend of ours home like six months ago.
and it smelled like a sterile hospital.
And the reason that it smelled like a sterile hospital
is because they use just regular cleaning supplies,
but we've gotten so used to non-having it.
And what I've noticed even with using Michelle's fragrance,
Henry Rose, is that when I smell now a cologne,
it's extra invasive into my space
because I've gotten used to not having it.
Yeah, we had a woman come in here yesterday
with a ton of perfume onto my eyes were watering.
She was a very lovely woman,
but she probably thinks that she's using great stuff.
but it's just because I'm so, I'm not used to it anymore.
Once you strip the stuff, you feel it's almost like sensory overload.
No, I mean, it's like art, right?
People will accept bad art as long as that's all it's available.
Right.
It's like Taylor's teeth with the roundup in it.
I can really tell.
Taylor's having a bowl a cup of crunch back there.
Ken Cook, where can everyone support what you're doing, the EWG?
Tell us all the things where they can go find everything, your Instagram, the EWG
Instagram.
Well, the best place to start is eWG.org.
We have a healthy living app you can download for food and personal care products.
So you can be right in the store and find out on the spot.
But I recommend people still come to a web page, the old-fashioned web page,
just because of the wealth of material and the ability to really dive into it.
The app is great for checking individual products.
But if you want to sort of give some thought to why you're doing all this, why you need to do it,
and we've talked about a lot of the themes already, right?
The government's just not able to protect you in the way we want, even though they should.
And we're holding their feet to the fire.
There are many more offerings out there for all of these categories than there were just a few years ago.
And the more you support that growing environmental health economy, the bigger it gets.
The more it shoves aside the bad stuff in any market segment and takes over more.
market share and it makes it easier. It would be great if you didn't ever have to go to the
EWG website if you could just go into the store and you'd be fine. But that's not going to happen
anytime soon. So eWG.org is the place to start. Honestly, I could see you doing like grocery
stores or something or like beauty products yourself that are already verified.
One more question. Yeah. Michelle and Lauren promise me a sandwich for doing this.
I'm just kidding. Thanks, Ken. You're the best.
Much pleasure. Thanks for having me.
It's very fun.
Okay, so here's the giveaway details.
You're going to want to win this.
They are giving three winners, three of you,
a package of EWG approved clean skincare products.
Three of you are going to win Nenna Cleansing Cream,
three ships, exfoliation mask.
Oh my God.
Olai, brightening and vitamin C serum,
dime hyleronics serum,
the Golden Secrets heal all oil,
which I love.
Codex Labs, balancing,
soap and Amazon Aware Daily Body
Lotion with vitamin E in it.
To win, all you have to do is follow
at Environmental Working Group on Instagram
and comment your favorite takeaway
on my latest post at Lauren Bostic.
I hope you guys loved this episode
with Ken as much as I did.
I know this was very enlightening.
And with that, we will see you on Thursday.
